Abstract

Preface 1. Prospects and limits of the empirical study of expertise: an introduction K. Anders Ericsson and Jacqui Smith 2. Expertise in chess: the balance between knowledge and search Neil Charness 3. Learning and use of representation for physics expertise Yuichiro Anzai 4. The general and specific nature of medical expertise: a critical look Vilma L. Patel and Guy J. Groen 5. Motor-skill experts in sport, dance, and other domains Fran Allard and Janet L. Starkes 6. Musical expertise John Sloboda 7. Literate expertise Marlene Scardamalia and Carl Bereiter 8. The process-performance paradox in expert judgment: how can experts know so much and predict so badly? Colin F. Camerer and Eric J. Johnson 9. Controlling complex systems or, Expertise as 'grandmother's know-how' Dietrich Doerner and Julia Schoelkopf 10. Techniques for representing expert knowledge Judith Reitman Olson and Kevin J. Biolsi 11. Expertise as the circumvention of human processing limitations Timothy A. Salthouse 12. Symbolic connectionism: toward third-generation theories of expertise Keith J. Holyoak Index.

Keywords

MusicalConnectionismSociologyCognitive scienceRepresentation (politics)EpistemologyViolaPsychologyArt historyVisual artsPhilosophyArtLawPoliticsCognitionPiano

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Year
1991
Type
book
Citations
1787
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K. Anders Ericsson, Jacqui Smith (1991). Toward a general theory of expertise : prospects and limits. .